PRESENT PERFECT
Verb form – Subject + have/has +V3
Adverbs used here – already, just, yet, just now, recently etcetera.
The Present Perfect tense is a combination of both present tense and perfect form which is used to express a past event that has present sequence/ outcome of actions.
–> Present Perfect is used for a complete activity extending from some period of time in the past upto the present.
Also Read,
Important phrasal verbs
Examples :-
- There have been two murder cases in our locality during this month.
- Sunil has visited the USA.
- I have been to Switzerland.
–> For an activity which is already completed in the past, either recent or remote or we can say to be found out from the signs or evidences present.
Examples :-
- Somebody has broken the glass frame.
- Some one has turned the pages of the books on the table.
–> Can also be used to describe an uprising result in the present.
Examples:-
- I have had my dinner.
Note:Â I don’t need it now.
- Simran has told me a secret.
Note:Â She need not tell it again.
–> To express what has taken place or what has been the matter with in the speaker’s experience.
Examples :-
- We have seen many young men ruined by their evil environment.
- My father has seen a lot of things throughout his life.
Also Read,Â
LeArN TENSE with FuN- Lecture 1
PRESENT PERFECT PROGRESSIVE:
Verb form – Subject + have/has + been + ING
Adverbs used – Always, never, only, still etcetera.
This tense defines a continuous action that has been finished at some point of time previously in the past or was inducted in the past which continues to happen.
Note:Â The tense is used for the action started in the past and still going on in the present.
- Use of since is done to describe the point of time.
- Use of for is done to initiate the period of time.
[For two days, since Friday etcetera are Ll durations which are used in present perfect progressive]
Examples :-
- Sheetal has been teaching at the university since December.
- We have been drooling here for over two hours waiting for the food.
- They have been waiting for us for the last one hour.
–> Secondly without actually inducing a particular duration the tense has a general study with the word lately. When we don’t describe a particular time or duration, we use lately or recently which emphasizes on an approximate time.
Example :-
- Have you been studying lately?
- Ananya has not been going through her grammar lessons.
SOURCE: Based on Self-Knowledge
IMAGE SOURCE: GoogleÂ
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